Khaled Abu Toameh
Hudson New York
10 May 11
http://www.hudson-ny.org/2107/hamas-collaborators-fatah
The two main partners in the new Palestinian government, Hamas and
Fatah, have chosen to celebrate their unity accord by targeting anyone
who helps Israel.
This means that the new unity government, which is supposed to be
established in the coming weeks, would not only be opposed to
compromise, but would also target those who maintain contacts with
Israelis.
The timing of a recent execution in the Gaza Strip was seen as a warning
message from Hamas to Fatah against continued "collaboration" with
Israel.
Just hours before the signing of the Palestinian "reconciliation" pact
in Cairo last week, the Hamas authorities in the Gaza Strip announced
the execution by firing squad of Abdel Karim Shrair, 37, on charges of
"collaboration" with Israel.
Days later in the West Bank, Palestinian gunmen believed to be members
of Fatah, murdered Mohammed Khawaldi, 32, who had also been accused of
"collaboration" with Israel.
Instead of issuing a condemnation, Fatah rushed to murder a
"collaborator" in the West Bank – as if it is trying to tell the
Palestinians: "You see, we are also capable of killing people who help
Israel."
Fatah's failure to condemn the execution is a sign that the secular
faction does not want to anger its new partner: Hamas.
Whatever Shrair did to help Israel, it could not have been more than
what Abbas and Fayyad have done over the past few years. The two meet
with Israelis on a regular basis and support security coordination
between their security forces and the Israelis.
In the eyes of Hamas, Mahmoud Abbas and Salaam Fayyad are also
"traitors" because they have agreed -- at least in English and in public
-- to recognize Israel's right to exist. If Abbas and Fayyad were to
stand trail before a court on all what Hamas has accused them of doing,
they too would end up facing a firing squad.
Shrair, after all, was also affiliated with Fatah, and had served in
their security forces before Hamas seized control over the Gaza Strip in
the summer of 2007.
Citing Fatah security forces' security coordination with Israel, Hamas
had previously refused to sign the unity accord, demanding an end to all
forms of collaboration with Israel.
In the end, under Egyptian pressure, Hamas agreed temporarily to drop
its condition.
The issue of security coordination between the Fatah-controlled security
forces in the West Bank and Israel had been a major obstacle to ending
the dispute between the two rival Palestinian factions.
Over the past four years, Hamas complained that this security
coordination has resulted in the arrest and of hundreds of its followers
in the West Bank. The coordination, according to Hamas, has also led to
the elimination of many Hamas-linked institutions in the West Bank.
Hamas has also accused Fatah leaders of helping Israel during the 2008
Israeli military offensive in the Gaza Strip known as Operation Cast
Lead.
But now it appears that Hamas is willing to sit in a unity government
with Palestinians it still considers to be "collaborators" with Israel.
The decision to execute Shrair hours before the signing ceremony in
Cairo is an indication that Hamas continues to see the issue of
collaboration with Israel as a very serious matter. Many Palestinians
see it as a warning and challenge to Palestinian Authority President
Mahmoud Abbas and his prime minister, Salam Fayyad.
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